Protector III
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- First Name
- Dimitri
- Last Name
- Raptis
- Member #
22608
- Ham/GMRS Callsign
- 42.000
Protector III
22608
Enthusiast III
Protector III
22608
Man, if you are relying on AI to help wire your car you will burn it to the ground. This is coming from a 20 year auto tech that has had to remove a rash of ridiculous installs of shit with people doing what you are. It does not understand ohm's law and how it applies in the real world. It spits out stuff it copied elsewhere.
Protector III
22608
I use the various AI bots to plan routes, find trails.... but nothing beats the tips and advice of the people who have been there / done that
I am by no means an AI expert (hardly a neophyte) however my recollection of early attempts to create AI guidance and advice (on technical problems) was that the system which was developed (or at least in development) by the company for which I worked relied almost entirely on the experience of "people who have been there / done that". It was imperfect, indeed not of much value at the time, however did provide a basic level of guidance for key decision-making.I use the various AI bots to plan routes, find trails.... but nothing beats the tips and advice of the people who have been there / done that
Man, if you are relying on AI to help wire your car you will burn it to the ground.
Hmm - "modern" is obviously recent, by definition.Modern AI is 2-8 years old (depending on how you measure it) and is already insanely capable. You guys talking like you've seen this before, simply haven't.
Pathfinder III
Hmm - "modern" is obviously recent, by definition.
Artificial intelligence has been in development since the late 1950s (The History of Artificial Intelligence - Science in the News).
Interesting article (refers back to early development since 1990, I note).Semantics.
Sure, "Artificial Intelligence" is a blanket term that's been around forever, but the "AI" that's currently discussed literally everywhere is 2-8 years old. So modern that it's not even mentioned in the dusty article you posted.
More modern stuff for ya: Transformer (deep learning architecture) - Wikipedia
Could one consider a map " artificial intelligence"?Kind of seems to opposite to what I want out of my traveling and exploring experiences. Kind of the point of it for me is to be unplugged and self-reliant.
But I am old and still injoye reading a map and discovering what is over the next hill.
Pathfinder III
Could one consider a map " artificial intelligence"?Kind of seems to opposite to what I want out of my traveling and exploring experiences. Kind of the point of it for me is to be unplugged and self-reliant.
But I am old and still injoye reading a map and discovering what is over the next hill.
Protector III
22608
Influencer III

Protector III
22608
I wrote this a while back on my blog, if you take a look read to the end.....
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Overlanding and AI: A Journey into the Future
Overlanding offers a unique blend of freedom, self-reliance, and awe-inspiring landscapes. But what happens when we infuse this age-old pursuit with cutting-edge technology? Enter Artificial Intelligence (AI)whiskey7backroads.com
Member II
30139
Influencer III
Pathfinder III
It's all good, enjoy the outdoors the way you like. Different tools for different folks are a good thing. I like to explore without maps and navigation and get lost. Others find that crazy and can't get out of the driveway without a map. As long as we get out, enjoy ourselves, stay safe, respect the land, and take care of our garbage, it's all good.
Brent
Whiskey7backroads.com